It was with Hurricane Katrina that the national rescue infrastructure first came together. Thousands of pets separated from their owners in Louisiana, or with owners who had lost everything and had no means of supporting them, were shipped up north so that they could be adopted. Later, several other shipments of rescue animals from southern States followed, receiving a good bit of news coverage because the animals were cute and the adopters thrilled to see them. There were no natural disasters occasioning these, however – so what was going on?
It’s a difference in culture, the rescue workers tell us, as Christina Thomas and Samantha Wishman’s documentary takes us to Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee to find out where the animals still being shipped today come from. Simply put, there are ten times as many animals in the rescue system here as up north. Few people spay or neuter their pets.
It’s a difference in culture, the rescue workers tell us, as Christina Thomas and Samantha Wishman’s documentary takes us to Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee to find out where the animals still being shipped today come from. Simply put, there are ten times as many animals in the rescue system here as up north. Few people spay or neuter their pets.
- 12/11/2022
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
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